Los Angeles Times

VENEZUELA ELECTION VIOLENCE

Candidate is among nine reported slain. Vote is meant to boost the president’s power.

- By Mery Mogollon and Chris Kraul Special correspond­ents Mogollon and Kraul reported from Caracas and Bogota, Colombia, respective­ly.

Nine people, including a candidate, are reportedly killed amid widespread violence as Venezuelan voters elect a constituti­onal assembly.

CARACAS, Venezuela — A candidate for Venezuela’s constituti­onal assembly was one of nine people reported killed amid widespread violence as voters went to the polls Sunday in a hotly contested election aimed at giving greater power to President Nicolas Maduro.

Jose Felix Pineda, a proMaduro candidate in the election to select members of the assembly, was reportedly shot to death Saturday night at his home in Heres township in Bolivar state by two unknown assailants.

The shooting took place during a family gathering at which others present were robbed of their belongings, according to a government statement.

Although the motive for his death was not known, Pineda was the second candidate to be killed in the runup to the election, which has further divided the country. Protests, sometimes violent, raged through the country as opposition leaders urged Venezuelan­s to stay away from the polls.

An explosion in the affluent Altamira neighborho­od in the eastern barrio of the capital, Caracas, on Sunday morning injured as many as seven national police officers and destroyed four of the motorcycle­s they were riding, the government said. Video showed the police riding in formation down a broad street when the explosion occurred, creating a large fireball that engulfed some of the officers.

Defense Minister Vladimir Padrino Lopez said in an interview broadcast over state-run TV that 100 voting machines had been burned in the western state of Tachira by opposition protesters.

A survey of polling stations in rich and poor neighborho­ods in Caracas indicated strong turnout in barrios controlled by Maduro supporters and virtually no voting in the eastern portion of the city aligned with opposition forces.

Opposition leaders had urged Maduro opponents to boycott the voting, calling it an illegal power grab and an attempt by the president to sideline the opposition-controlled National Assembly. Unlike the last redraft in 1999, no authorizin­g referendum was held by Maduro before the vote to legitimize a new constituti­on.

No election results were available early Sunday evening, and the National Electoral Council did not release turnout figures, which are commonly released the day of elections. But it was a foregone conclusion that the results would favor the government, because the ballot was packed with pro-government candidates.

In addition to the 117 deaths now attributed to four months of nationwide disturbanc­es, more than 3,500 people have been injured and 4,500 arrested as protesters clash with police and the national guard.

“I didn’t vote, because I’m against this government,” said Marta Gomez, 36, an unemployed mother of three interviewe­d in Caracas’ working-class Catia barrio. Maduro “didn’t bother to consult us to see if we wanted a change, and he hasn’t said what articles [of the existing charter] would be modified.”

One person who did vote, 35-year-old secretary Isabel Garcia, said she did so only because she was afraid she would lose her public sector job if she didn’t. “I don’t feel excitement or sadness. I’m not in favor of changing the constituti­on. But where I work, we were all obligated to vote.”

David Smilde, a sociology professor at Tulane University who has written about Venezuelan politics, said the constituti­onal assembly could convene in coming days. Its first orders of business are expected to include dissolving the National Assembly and removing current attorney general and Maduro critic Luisa Ortega Diaz.

“On the opposition side, I assume there will be protests and efforts to block off roads,” Smilde said. “They really don’t have much left in their tool kit.”

Disturbanc­es began in late March after the Supreme Court transferre­d legislativ­e powers from the National Assembly to Maduro, provoking widespread outrage. Although partially rescinded, the move launched almost-daily protests over food scarcities, violent crime and an increasing­ly autocratic government.

Even harder times could be in store. The United States is said to be considerin­g harsher sanctions against the government, including a possible ban on Venezuelan oil imports and the prohibitio­n of the use of the U.S. dollar in transactio­ns conducted by stateowned oil company PDVSA.

“Some form of oil sanctions are likely by the U.S., which would lead to default [on payment of foreign debt] and dramatical­ly worsen the economic situation, which is already dire,” said Francisco Monaldi, a Rice University economics and oil policy professor.

Henry Ramos Allup, an opposition legislator and former president of the National Assembly, said on a social media account that among the overnight deaths was that of Ricardo Campos, a youth organizer of the opposition Democratic Action party. Allup said Campos was shot to death early Sunday but gave no further details.

In addition, El Universal newspaper reported four deaths in Merida state, a hotbed of anti-Maduro protests.

Among the dead were two men, Eduardo Olave and Angelo Mendez, who were reportedly shot as they tried to remove pro-Maduro campaign posters, the newspaper said.

Venezuelan­s are being asked by Maduro to elect 537 members of a new constituti­onal assembly that will convene Aug. 30 to draft a new constituti­on, replacing the one passed by Maduro’s predecesso­r, the late Hugo Chavez, in 1999.

The opposition’s main political entity, the Democratic Unity coalition, urged voters to stay away because the new assembly would contain only Maduro loyalists and because the new body will probably replace the democratic­ally elected National Assembly.

Analysts said Sunday that despite domestic opposition and repudiatio­n by several internatio­nal leaders, the government will probably proceed with the constituti­onal assembly.

“Maduro and his political allies will control the new constituen­t assembly and be in a position to rewrite the constituti­on to give Maduro complete dictatoria­l powers,” said Bruce Bagley, internatio­nal relations professor at the University of Miami.

“But he will not be able to govern an increasing­ly resentful and mobilized population without resorting to heavy military repression and massive incarcerat­ion of the Venezuelan people and opposition leaders,” Bagley said.

 ?? Miguel Gutierrez European Pressphoto Agency ??
Miguel Gutierrez European Pressphoto Agency
 ?? Juan Barreto AFP/Getty Images ?? FLAMES ENGULF Venezuelan police after an explosion in Caracas that authoritie­s said injured as many as seven officers. Opponents decried the constituti­onal assembly election as a power grab by the president.
Juan Barreto AFP/Getty Images FLAMES ENGULF Venezuelan police after an explosion in Caracas that authoritie­s said injured as many as seven officers. Opponents decried the constituti­onal assembly election as a power grab by the president.
 ?? Miguel Gutierrez European Pressphoto Agency ?? AN OFFICER receives help after the Caracas blast. Protests have been raging in Venezuela since March.
Miguel Gutierrez European Pressphoto Agency AN OFFICER receives help after the Caracas blast. Protests have been raging in Venezuela since March.

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